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  2. Sailing ship tactics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sailing_ship_tactics

    Sailing ship tactics were the naval tactics employed by sailing ships in contrast to galley tactics employed by oared vessels. This article focuses on the period from c. 1500 to the mid-19th century, after which sailing warships were replaced with steam-powered ironclads .

  3. Oared vessel tactics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oared_vessel_tactics

    The Battle of Lepanto. Oared vessel tactics were the dominant form of naval tactics used from antiquity to the late 16th century when sailing ships began to replace galleys and other types of oared ships as the principal form of warships.

  4. Naval tactics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_tactics

    Sailing ship tactics: Tactics focused on sailing warships, especially from the late 16th century, including the development of the line of battle. Naval tactics in the Age of Steam: The development of the steam-powered ironclad firing explosive shells lead to new tactics that were developed for the big-gun Dreadnought battleships.

  5. Naval warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_warfare

    Chinese naval warfare in this period featured grapple-and-hook, as well as ramming tactics with ships called "stomach strikers" and "colliding swoopers". [44] It was written in the Han dynasty that the people of the Warring States era had employed chuan ge ships (dagger-axe ships, or halberd ships), thought to be a simple description of ships ...

  6. Naval boarding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_boarding

    Throughout the ancient and post-classical periods, all naval ship-to-ship combat focused primarily on boarding, although ramming and incendiaries were secondary tactics. Greek and Persian naval tactics emphasized ramming and boarding, notably at the Battle of Salamis. [1] The earliest Roman naval battles against Carthage also emphasized boarding.

  7. Sailing ship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sailing_ship

    Naval tactics evolved to bring each ship's firepower to bear in a line of battle—coordinated movements of a fleet of warships to engage a line of ships in the enemy fleet. [38] Carracks with a single cannon deck evolved into galleons with as many as two full cannon decks, [ 39 ] which evolved into the man-of-war, and further into the ship of ...

  8. Naval artillery in the Age of Sail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_artillery_in_the_Age...

    French ships used similarly standardized caliber guns of 36-pound, 24-pounders, 18-pounders, 12-pounders, and 8-pounders, augmented by carronades and smaller pieces. The word pound in this context refers to the French pre-metric unit of weight - the livre , which was 7.916 percent more than the English/British equivalent; thus, as an example ...

  9. Ship of the line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship_of_the_line

    The lighter ships were used for various functions, including acting as scouts, and relaying signals between the flagship and the rest of the fleet. This was necessary because from the flagship, only a small part of the line would be in clear sight. The adoption of line-of-battle tactics had consequences for ship design.